Arrival of Land Plants 400 Million Years Ago Changed Earth’s Climate Control System
Arrival of Land Plants 400 Million Years Ago Changed Earth’s Climate Control System
Water Collects on Mosses

Water collects on mosses. The first land plants were thought to be non-vascular, like mosses. Credit: Katmai Preserve NPS Photo/Russ Taylor

The arrival of plants on land about 400 million years ago may have changed the way the Earth naturally regulates its own climate, according to a new study led by researchers at UCL (University College London) and Yale.

The carbon cycle, the process through which carbon moves between rocks, oceans, living organisms and the atmosphere, acts as Earth’s natural thermostat, regulating its temperature over long time periods.

In a new study, published in the journal Nature, researchers looked at samples from rocks spanning the last three billion years and found evidence of a dramatic change in how this cycle functioned about 400 million years ago, when plants started to colonize land.

Specifically, the researchers noted a change in the chemistry of seawater recorded in the rock that indicates a major shift in the global formation of clay – the “clay mineral factory” – from the oceans to the land.

Boriana Kalderon-Asael Collecting 450-Million-Year-Old Rock Samples

Sampling of Ordovician (450 million-year-old) sediments by first author Boriana Kalderon-Asael. Credit: Ashleigh Hood

Since clay forming in the ocean (reverse weathering) leads to carbon dioxide being released into the atmosphere, while clay on land is a byproduct of chemical weathering that removes carbon dioxide from the air, this reduced the amount of carbon in the atmosphere, leading to a cooler planet and a seesawing climate, with alternating ice ages and warmer periods.

The researchers suggested the switch was caused by the spread of land plants keeping soils and clays on land, stopping carbon from being washed into the ocean, and by the growth in marine life using silicon for their skeletons and cell walls, such as sponges, single-celled algae and radiolarians (a group of protozoa), leading to a drop in silicon in the seawater required for clay formation.

Senior author Dr. Philip Pogge von Strandmann (UCL Earth Sciences) said: “Our study suggests that the carbon cycle operated in a fundamentally different way for most of Earth’s history compared to the present day.

“The shift, which occurred gradually between 400 to 500 million years ago, appears to be linked to two major biological innovations at the time: the spread of plants on land and the growth of marine organisms that extract silicon from water to create their skeletons and cells walls.

“Before this change, atmospheric carbon dioxide remained high, leading to a stable, greenhouse climate. Since then, our climate has bounced back and forth between ice ages and warmer periods. This kind of change promotes evolution and during this period the evolution of complex life accelerated, with land-based animals forming for the first time.

“A less carbon-rich atmosphere is also more sensitive to change, allowing humans to influence the climate more easily through the burning of fossil fuels.”

First author Boriana Kalderon-Asael, a PhD student at Yale University, said: “By measuring lithium isotopes in rocks spanning most of Earth’s history, we aimed to investigate if anything had changed in the functioning of the carbon cycle over a large time scale. We found that it had, and this change appears to be linked to the growth of plant life on land and silicon-using animal life in the sea.”

In the study, researchers measured lithium isotopes in 600 samples of rock taken from many different locations around the world. Lithium has two naturally occurring stable isotopes – one with three protons and three neutrons, and one with three protons and four neutrons.

When clay forms slowly on land, it strongly favors lithium-6, leaving surrounding water enriched with the other, heavier isotope, lithium-7. Analyzing their samples using mass spectrometry, the researchers found a rise in the levels of lithium isotope-7 in seawater recorded in the rock occurring between 400 and 500 million years ago, suggesting a major shift in Earth’s clay production coinciding with the spread of plants on land and emergence of silicon-using marine life.

Clay forms on land as a residue of chemical weathering, the primary long-term process through which carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere. This occurs when atmospheric carbon combines with water to form a weak acid, carbonic acid, which falls to the ground as rain and dissolves rocks, releasing ions including calcium ions that flow into the ocean. Eventually, the carbon is locked up in rocks on the ocean floor. In contrast, carbon drawdown by plant photosynthesis is negated once the plants decay, and rarely affects carbon dioxide levels on timescales longer than a few hundred years.

When clay forms in the ocean, carbon stays in the water and is eventually released into the air as part of the continual exchange of carbon that occurs when air meets water.

Reference: “A lithium-isotope perspective on the evolution of carbon and silicon cycles” by Boriana Kalderon-Asael, Joachim A. R. Katchinoff, Noah J. Planavsky, Ashleigh v. S. Hood, Mathieu Dellinger, Eric J. Bellefroid, David S. Jones, Axel Hofmann, Frantz Ossa Ossa, Francis A. Macdonald, Chunjiang Wang, Terry T. Isson, Jack G. Murphy, John A. Higgins, A. Joshua West, Malcolm W. Wallace, Dan Asael and Philip A. E. Pogge von Strandmann, 14 July 2021, Nature.
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03612-1

The study received support from the European Research Council and NASA.

FROM THE FIELD: Cameroon’s displaced, get hooked on fish
FROM THE FIELD: Cameroon’s displaced, get hooked on fish
Cameroonians who have been displaced by conflict and climate change in the north of the West African country are turning to aquaculture as an alternative source of income, thanks to support from the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
They’ve been learning how to breed fish in tanks hundreds of miles away from the sea, in a region where crops, raising animals and artisanal fishing on Lake Chad, have been the traditional farming activities.

There are more than 300,000 internally displaced people in the Far North Region of Cameroon who have been driven from their homes by both terrorist activity and the shrinking of Lake Chad due to climate change.

In early 2021, some 2.7 million people were thought to be food insecure in the country, a situation which the COVID-19 pandemic has aggravated.

Read more here about how displaced people are fishing for a new future.

And find out more here about FAO’s work in Cameroon.

The Virus Trap: Hollow Nano-Objects Made of DNA Could Trap Viruses and Render Them Harmless
The Virus Trap: Hollow Nano-Objects Made of DNA Could Trap Viruses and Render Them Harmless
Nano-Shells Made of DNA Material

Lined on the inside with virus-binding molecules, nano-shells made of DNA material bind viruses tightly and thus render them harmless. Credit: Elena-Marie Willner / DietzLab / TUM

To date, there are no effective antidotes against most virus infections. An interdisciplinary research team at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) has now developed a new approach: they engulf and neutralize viruses with nano-capsules tailored from genetic material using the DNA origami method. The strategy has already been tested against hepatitis and adeno-associated viruses in cell cultures. It may also prove successful against coronaviruses.

There are antibiotics against dangerous bacteria, but few antidotes to treat acute viral infections. Some infections can be prevented by vaccination but developing new vaccines is a long and laborious process.

Now an interdisciplinary research team from the Technical University of Munich, the Helmholtz Zentrum München, and the Brandeis University (USA) is proposing a novel strategy for the treatment of acute viral infections: The team has developed nanostructures made of DNA, the substance that makes up our genetic material, that can trap viruses and render them harmless.

For the DNA plates to assemble into larger geometrical structures, the edges must be slightly beveled. The correct choice and positioning of binding points on the edges ensure that the panels self-assemble to the desired objects. The video shows a cryo-EM 3D reconstruction of an open nano-shell. Credit: Christian Sigl / DietzLab / TUM

DNA nanostructures

Even before the new variant of the coronavirus put the world on hold, Hendrik Dietz, Professor of Biomolecular Nanotechnology at the Physics Department of the Technical University of Munich, and his team were working on the construction of virus-sized objects that assemble themselves.

In 1962, the biologist Donald Caspar and the biophysicist Aaron Klug discovered the geometrical principles according to which the protein envelopes of viruses are built. Based on these geometric specifications, the team around Hendrik Dietz at the Technical University of Munich, supported by Seth Fraden and Michael Hagan from Brandeis University in the USA, developed a concept that made it possible to produce artificial hollow bodies the size of a virus.

In the summer of 2019, the team asked whether such hollow bodies could also be used as a kind of “virus trap”. If they were to be lined with virus-binding molecules on the inside, they should be able to bind viruses tightly and thus be able to take them out of circulation. For this, however, the hollow bodies would also have to have sufficiently large openings through which viruses can get into the shells.

“None of the objects that we had built using DNA origami technology at that time would have been able to engulf a whole virus – they were simply too small,” says Hendrik Dietz in retrospect. “Building stable hollow bodies of this size was a huge challenge.”

Christian Sigl

An interdisciplinary research team at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) has developed a radically new antiviral treatment: they engulf and thereby neutralize viruses with nano-capsules tailored from genetic material. The strategy has already been tested against hepatitis and adeno-associated viruses in cell cultures. The image shows lead author Christian Sigl preparing the nano-capsules in the laboratory of the Center for Nanotechnology and Nanomaterials at TUM. Credit: Daniel Delang / TUM

The kit for a virus trap

Starting from the basic geometric shape of the icosahedron, an object made up of 20 triangular surfaces, the team decided to build the hollow bodies for the virus trap from three-dimensional, triangular plates.

For the DNA plates to assemble into larger geometrical structures, the edges must be slightly beveled. The correct choice and positioning of binding points on the edges ensure that the panels self-assemble to the desired objects.

“In this way, we can now program the shape and size of the desired objects using the exact shape of the triangular plates,” says Hendrik Dietz. “We can now produce objects with up to 180 subunits and achieve yields of up to 95 percent. The route there was, however, quite rocky, with many iterations.”

Viruses are reliably blocked

By varying the binding points on the edges of the triangles, the team’s scientists can not only create closed hollow spheres, but also spheres with openings or half-shells. These can then be used as virus traps.

In cooperation with the team of Prof. Ulrike Protzer, head of the Institute for Virology at TUM and director of the Institute for Virology at the Helmholtz Zentrum München, the team tested the virus traps on adeno-associated viruses and hepatitis B virus cores.

“Even a simple half-shell of the right size shows a measurable reduction in virus activity,” says Hendrik Dietz. “If we put five binding sites for the virus on the inside, for example suitable antibodies, we can already block the virus by 80 percent, if we incorporate more, we achieve complete blocking.”

To prevent the DNA particles from being immediately degraded in body fluids, the team irradiated the finished building blocks with UV light and treated the outside with polyethylene glycol and oligolysine. The particles were thus stable in mouse serum for 24 hours.

A universal construction principle

Now the next step is to test the building blocks on living mice. “We are very confident that this material will also be well tolerated by the human body,” says Dietz.

“Bacteria have a metabolism. We can attack them in different ways, ” says Prof. Ulrike Protzer. “Viruses, on the other hand, do not have their own metabolism, which is why antiviral drugs are almost always targeted against a specific enzyme in a single virus. Such a development takes time. If the idea of simply mechanically eliminating viruses can be realized, this would be widely applicable and thus an important breakthrough, especially for newly emerging viruses.

The starting materials for the virus traps can be mass-produced biotechnologically at a reasonable cost. “In addition to the proposed application as a virus trap, our programmable system also creates other opportunities,” says Hendrik Dietz. “It would also be conceivable to use it as a multivalent antigen carrier for vaccinations, as a DNA or RNA carrier for gene therapy or as a transport vehicle for drugs.”

Reference: “Programmable icosahedral shell system for virus trapping” by Christian Sigl, Elena M. Willner, Wouter Engelen, Jessica A. Kretzmann, Ken Sachenbacher, Anna Liedl, Fenna Kolbe, Florian Wilsch, S. Ali Aghvami, Ulrike Protzer, Michael F. Hagan, Seth Fraden and Hendrik Dietz, 14 June 2021, Nature Materials.
DOI: 10.1038/s41563-021-01020-4

The research was funded by the European Community’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program under the FET-Open project VIROFIGHT (grant no. 899619), the European Research Council (ERC) under a Consolidator Grant, the German Research Foundation (DFG) through SFB863 and TRR179, and by grants of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Program, the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) through the StabVacB project and the German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), the National Science Foundation of the USA via the Brandeis University Materials Research Science and Engineering Center, the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) of the USA, and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (AvH).

‘An international star’: Award-winning Easton children’s book illustrator Floyd Cooper dead at 65
‘An international star’: Award-winning Easton children’s book illustrator Floyd Cooper dead at 65

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Watching the Ultrafast Dance Moves of a Hot, Dense Laser Plasma
Watching the Ultrafast Dance Moves of a Hot, Dense Laser Plasma
Capturing Ultrafast Motions Laser Plasma

A two-dimensional Doppler spectrometer captures the motions of a high intensity, femtosecond laser induced hot, dense plasma at different locations on a solid surface. Credit: K. Jana and Amit Lad

Great leaps in science and technology have been propelled by recent advances in seeing fast-evolving physical phenomena, as they happen. Femtosecond lasers from the infrared to the X-ray region have enabled us to ‘watch’, in real-time, atoms dance in molecules and solids on femtosecond and picosecond timescales. Watching such fascinating motions not just in real-time but at the spatial locations where they happen, is a bigger challenge.

It is precisely this advance that has been made by a team of researchers at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, York University and the Rutherford Appleton Laboratories, UK. They exploded a solid surface with an ultrahigh intensity (10^19 W/sq.cm), 25 femtosecond laser pulse (pump) creating a hot, dense plasma and monitored its ultra-rapid motion by reflecting a weak second femtosecond pulse (probe). The Doppler shifts in the wavelength imposed on the reflected probe pulse by the fast-evolving plasma give away the outward (blue shift) and inward (red shift) motions of the plasma.

The motion of a hot, dense plasma created on a solid target surface by an ultrahigh intensity laser. The movie shows different regions of a plasma moving in and out at high speed at different times, quite unlike the usual expectation of a somewhat uniform motion. (Data were interpolated between measured data points to make the movie for illustration.) Credit: Ankit Dulat

No previous study captured the motion on the entire plasma surface — the ‘dance floor’ — in a single experiment. This team coupled femtosecond time resolution with micrometer space resolution, thereby capturing the ultra-rapid twists and turns of the plasma at different transverse locations.

The experiments devised a novel 2-D Doppler monitor with sixteen independent, single shot, high-resolution spectrometers all triggered by the pump laser pulse and capturing the instantaneous velocity of the plasma at different spatial locations. They show that different portions of the plasma move in and out at different times, contrary to the usual expectation of a somewhat uniform motion. This new method can prove very useful for tracking the flow of heat and energy along the surface and watching the growth of plasma instabilities, very important for understanding laser plasma science and pushing forward applications of high intensity, femtosecond laser-driven laser plasmas in imaging and laser fusion.

Reference: “Femtosecond, two-dimensional spatial Doppler mapping of ultraintense laser-solid target interaction” by Kamalesh Jana, Amit D. Lad, David West, Will Trickey, Chris Underwood, Yash M. Ved, A. P. L. Robinson, J. Pasley and G. Ravindra Kumar, 9 July 2021, Physical Review Research.
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.3.033034

Common Antibiotic – Azithromycin – No More Effective Than Placebo for COVID-19
Common Antibiotic – Azithromycin – No More Effective Than Placebo for COVID-19
Apoptotic Cell SARS-CoV-2 Virus Particles

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of an apoptotic cell (green) heavily infected with SARS-COV-2 virus particles (purple), isolated from a patient sample. Image captured at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Maryland. Credit: NIAID

A UC San Francisco study has found that the antibiotic azithromycin was no more effective than a placebo in preventing symptoms of COVID-19 among non-hospitalized patients, and may increase their chance of hospitalization, despite widespread prescription of the antibiotic for the disease.

“These findings do not support the routine use of azithromycin for outpatient SARS-CoV-2 infection,” said lead author Catherine E. Oldenburg, ScD, MPH, an assistant professor with the UCSF Proctor Foundation. SARS-CoV-2 is the virus that causes COVID-19.

Azithromycin, a broad-spectrum antibiotic, is widely prescribed as a treatment for COVID-19 in the United States and the rest of the world. “The hypothesis is that it has anti-inflammatory properties that may help prevent progression if treated early in the disease,” said Oldenburg. “We did not find this to be the case.”

The study, which was conducted in collaboration with Stanford University, appears July 16, 2021, in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

The study included 263 participants who all tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 within seven days before entering the study. None were hospitalized at the time of enrollment. In a random selection process, 171 participants received a single, 1.2 gram oral dose of azithromycin and 92 received an identical placebo.

At day 14 of the study, 50 percent of the participants remained symptom free in both groups. By day 21, five of the participants who received azithromycin had been hospitalized with severe symptoms of COVID-19 and none of the placebo group had been hospitalized.

The researchers concluded that treatment with a single dose of azithromycin compared to placebo did not result in greater likelihood of being symptom-free.

“Most of the trials done so far with azithromycin have focused on hospitalized patients with pretty severe disease,” said Oldenburg. “Our paper is one of the first placebo-controlled studies showing no role for azithromycin in outpatients.”

Reference: “Effect of Oral Azithromycin vs Placebo on COVID-19 Symptoms in Outpatients With SARS-CoV-2 InfectionA Randomized Clinical Trial” by Catherine E. Oldenburg, ScD, MPH; Benjamin A. Pinsky, MD, PhD; Jessica Brogdon, MPH, TM; Cindi Chen, MS1; Kevin Ruder, BS; Lina Zhong, BS; Fanice Nyatigo, BS; Catherine A. Cook, MPH; Armin Hinterwirth, PhD; Elodie Lebas, RN; Travis Redd, MD, MPH; Travis C. Porco, PhD, MPH; Thomas M. Lietman, MD; Benjamin F. Arnold, PhD, MPH and Thuy Doan, MD, PhD, 16 July 2021, JAMA.
DOI: 10.1001/jama.2021.11517

Co-authors included Jessica Brogdon, MPH&TM; Cindi Chen, MS; Kevin Ruder; Lina Zhong; Fanice Nyatigo; Catherine A. Cook, MPH; Armin Hinterwirth, PhD; Elodie Lebas, RN; Travis Redd, MD, MPH; Travis C. Porco, PhD, MPH; Thomas M. Lietman, MD; and Benjamin F. Arnold, PhD, MPH, all of UCSF; senior investigator Thuy Doan, MD, PhD, with the UCSF Proctor Foundation, and Benjamin A. Pinsky, MD, PhD, of Stanford University.

The trial was supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (INV-017026). Azithromycin and matching placebo were donated by Pfizer, Inc. (New York, NY). Thuy Doan was supported in part by a Research to Prevent Blindness Career Development Award. The authors had no conflicts of interest.

British city apologizes, pays fine after scrapping ads for evangelical preacher Franklin Graham
British city apologizes, pays fine after scrapping ads for evangelical preacher Franklin Graham
(Photo: Franklin Graham Facebook page)

Britain’s city of Blackpool must apologize for removing ads for evangelical preacher Franklin Graham from public buses; it had to admit the act was discrimination and pay the organizers of a festival 109,000 British pounds (about $150,000), a judge has ruled.

“We sincerely apologize to the organizers of the event for the upset and inconvenience caused,” Counsellor Lynn Williams, Leader of Blackpool Council, wrote on the city’s website on July 9 following a court ruling in April.

Graham, the son of the late tele-evangelist Billy Graham, said, “We thank God for this ruling because it is a win for every Christian in the UK,” the evangelical publication Decision reported.

In July 2018, promotional bus adverts for the Lancashire Festival of Hope with Graham in Blackpool were removed by Blackpool Borough Council and Blackpool Transport Services Limited because they asserted that the ads “resulted in heightened tension.”

At the time, the decision was reported as in response to what the transportation company said was “customer and public feedback,” expressing disapproval of Franklin Graham’s Biblical views about sexuality and marriage.

The court found that the ads in the northern English city had been inoffensive, simply reading “Lancashire Festival of Hope with Franklin Graham–Time for Hope,” along with the date, venue, and website for the event.

Judge Claire Evans wrote, “Graham’s religious beliefs include that – God’s plan for human sexuality is to be expressed only within the context of marriage – marriage is exclusively the union of one genetic male and one genetic female.

“These are religious beliefs shared by the organizers of the Festival and the trustees of the Claimant and, indeed, by many Christians of different denominations.”

She noted that Graham had been accused in a September 2018 article in The Guardian newspaper of having a “track record of homophobic and Islamophobic comments.”

She said, however, that the transportation company had a “wholesale disregard” for the Lancashire Festival of Hope’s right to freedom of expression.

It had also violated the UK’s Equality Act of 2010, which makes it unlawful to discriminate against someone because of religion or belief.

Judge Evans noted that sincerely held traditional religious beliefs about marriage, which are characteristic of Christians and other religions, do not make the individuals or organizations who have them “extremist.”

‘SIGNIFICANT DAY FOR RELIGIOUS LIBERTY’

“It is a significant day for religious liberty and freedom of speech,” said James Barrett, chairman of the board of directors for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association UK.

“… The court, in this case, recognized that Blackpool’s Council cared more about not displeasing the LGBTQ community than upholding the rights of local churches to advertise a Christian festival of hope.”

The evidence in the trial showed Blackpool Council and Blackpool Transport Services Limited deliberately favored one group over another while seeking to maintain that they were neutral.

But internal emails showed officials expressing their disapproval of Graham and looking for a legal reason to stop the advertising campaign, even though around 200 local churches supported it.

Barrett said, “The judge summarized it best in her ruling when she said, ‘This is the antithesis of the manner in which a public authority should behave in a democratic society.'”

The court calculated the cost of removing the bus ads at 84,000 pounds for the Lancashire City’s Festival of Hope’s legal fees and an additional 25,000 for “just satisfaction,” because the city violated the UK Human Rights Act of 1998

Judge Claire Evans handed down the terms on July 16, with agreement from both sides, said Christianity Today.

“A pluralistic, tolerant society allows for the expression of many different and sometimes diametrically opposed beliefs,” the judge wrote.

The city published the apology on its website and must pay the fines in one week.

The court calculated the cost of removing the bus ads at 84,000 pounds for the Lancashire City’s Festival of Hope’s legal fees and an additional 25,000 for “just satisfaction” because the city violated the UK Human Rights Act of 1998.

When the city removed the ads, it claimed this was necessary because of “heightened tension” caused by Graham’s position on LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) issues.

But internal emails showed officials expressing their disapproval of Graham and looking for a legal reason to stop the advertising campaign for the event, supported by around 200 local churches.

“We accept that the advertisements were not in themselves offensive. We further accept that in removing the advertisements, we did not take into account the fact that this might cause offense to other members of the public and suggest that some voices should not be heard,” said the Blackpool Council leader said.

“We also regret that we did not consult with the organizers prior to making our decision.

International OSINT taskforce to verify & investigate incidents in Myanmar
International OSINT taskforce to verify & investigate incidents in Myanmar
A major new initiative to record, verify and investigate incidents in Myanmar has been launched. Myanmar Witness will independently collect, preserve, process, investigate, verify and review incidents of possible interferences with human rights. The project will be sharing information with the United Nations’ Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM), to ensure evidence for future accountability for human rights violations is verified and preserved.

The international project team brings together leading experts in open-source intelligence techniques, digital forensics, weapon system identification and disinformation, with a network of dozens of civil society actors from across Myanmar. The project will be coordinated by the Centre for Information Resilience, a UK-based non-profit with expertise in (OSINT) techniques to expose, document and counter harms committed by authoritarian states and malign actors.

Myanmar Witness will encourage civilians to safely submit digital content including photos, videos, social media posts and other data via a submission form. This collection and processing of evidence will be in line with international accountability standards. The project team will also independently verify incidents on open-source social media channels. All the data will be independently verified, hashed, and kept safely and securely, in line with international best practices and to preserve evidence for any possible future judicial processes. Safeguarding the identity of witnesses and those providing data will be of utmost importance.

Already, Myanmar Witness has uncovered and verified:

  • Evidence of reprisal attacks by the Myanmar Army
  • Evidence of shelling of civilian areas and religious buildings
  • Widespread indications of an intention to harm, if not kill, demonstrators
  • Evidence of mass arrests
  • Violence against medical workers

A spokesperson for Myanmar Witness said:

“The world has watched with horror at the growing number of apparent human rights incidents in Myanmar. At its heart, Myanmar Witness is about justice and accountability. Our analysts and researchers will work to independently investigate, verify and preserve alleged human rights violations of people across the country. We’ll be working closely with international bodies, NGOs and the media to ensure there is a clear, verified record of alleged incidents. Crucially, we’ll be sharing our findings with the IIMM to preserve evidence. Our work today will hopefully go some way to ensure accountability tomorrow.”

As well as a resource to preserve evidence for future judicial processes, the Myanmar Witness team will be freely available to journalists seeking to investigate possible human rights interferences. We welcome submissions or inquiries from journalists and media organisations. For more information, please visit: www.info-res.org/myanmarwitness

Myanmar Witness is supported through funding from the UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office.

Press release distributed by Pressat on behalf of Centre for Information Resilience, on Saturday 17 July, 2021. For more information subscribe and follow https://pressat.co.uk/

‘Unshackled’ Palm-Destroying Beetles Could Soon Invade Australia – “We Thought We’d Outsmarted Them”
‘Unshackled’ Palm-Destroying Beetles Could Soon Invade Australia – “We Thought We’d Outsmarted Them”
Rhinoceros Beetle in Hand

An adult coconut rhinoceros beetle in hand. Credit: Forest and Kim Starr

A destructive pest beetle is edging closer to Australia as biological controls fail, destroying home gardens, plantations, and biodiversity as they surge through nearby Pacific islands.

University of Queensland researcher Dr. Kayvan Etebari has been studying how palm-loving coconut rhinoceros beetles have been accelerating their invasion.

“We thought we’d outsmarted them,” Dr. Etebari said.

“In the 1970s, scientists from Australia and elsewhere found that coconut rhinoceros beetles could be controlled with a beetle virus from Malaysia.

“This virus stopped the beetle in its tracks and, for the last 50 years or so, it more-or-less stayed put – that is, until now.

“It seems that they are now unshackled from the virus in some places and could be in Australia before we know it.”

Rhinoceros Beetle

A close-up of the coconut rhinoceros beetle. Credit: The University of Queensland

In the last few years, the pest has spread to many South Pacific islands, including islands in Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu, causing severe agricultural and economic damage.

“If they spread to Australia, garden palms would be at risk, along with the country’s emerging date industry, coconuts, oil palms, and many other palms, both wild in the forests and ornamental,” Dr. Etebari said.

UQ’s Professor Michael Furlong said the research team investigated the beetle’s population genetics and the incidence of the virus in specimens collected in Fiji, New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea (PNG), Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Vanuatu, and the Philippines. 

“We found that there have been several new waves of beetle invasions, not only one as we first expected,” Professor Furlong said.

“And there are different populations of the beetle that we didn’t recognize previously – in the Solomon Islands for example, there are three populations of the beetle, and they are interbreeding.”

The beetles all look alike, but the molecular tests show they are different.

 “Similar to how scientists spot different strains of COVID-19, we are also detecting variations in the beetle virus,” Professor Furlong said.

“This presents us with a complex problem: multiple types of beetles and beetle-controlling virus.

“The next step will be finding out how these virus variations behave in these different beetles, and how this can be used to control them.

“We know the virus doesn’t kill the beetles outright, but probably affects the number of eggs a female lays and changes beetle behavior, for example how far infected beetles can fly, so we need to explore these important aspects of the interaction too.”

Dr. Etebari said investing in research and new control methods was vital, not only for Australia’s prosperity, but for humanitarian reasons.

“The coconut rhinoceros beetle remains a serious threat to livelihoods across Pacific islands, where the coconut tree remains their ‘tree of life’, providing essential resources like food, copra, building materials, and coastal protection for five million vulnerable people,” he said.

“It’s imperative that Australian scientists help our neighboring countries in the Pacific to tackle their emerging pests and diseases.

“And everything we’re finding in the Pacific islands may later be critical to managing the beetle here in Australia.”

The team’s research has been published in Virus Research, the Journal of Virology and Current Research in Insect Science.

Reference: “Examination of population genetics of the Coconut Rhinoceros Beetle (Oryctes rhinoceros) and the incidence of its biocontrol agent (Oryctes rhinoceros nudivirus) in the South Pacific Islands” by Kayvan Etebari, James Hereward, Apenisa Sailo, Emeline M. Ahoafi, Robert Tautua, Helen Tsatsia, Grahame V Jackson and Michael J. Furlong, 13 May 2021, Current Research in Insect Science.
DOI: 10.1016/j.cris.2021.100015

It was supported by funding from the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research and The University of Queensland.

“Get Out of the Water!” Monster Shark Movies Massacre Shark Conservation Efforts
“Get Out of the Water!” Monster Shark Movies Massacre Shark Conservation Efforts
Great White Shark Underwater

96% of shark movies overtly portray sharks as a threat to humans.

Undeniably the shark movie to end all shark movies, the 1975 blockbuster, Jaws, not only smashed box office expectations, but forever changed the way we felt about going into the water – and how we think about sharks.

Now, more than 40 years (and 100+ shark movies) on, people’s fear of sharks persists, with researchers at the University of South Australia concerned about the negative impact that shark movies are having on conservation efforts of this often-endangered animal.

In a world-first study, conservation psychology researchers, UniSA’s Dr. Briana Le Busque and Associate Professor Carla Litchfield have evaluated how sharks are portrayed in movies, finding that 96 percent of shark films are overtly portraying sharks as a threat to humans.

Dr. Le Busque says sensationalized depictions of sharks in popular media can unfairly influence how people perceive sharks and harm conservation efforts.

“Most of what people know about sharks is obtained through movies, or the news, where sharks are typically presented as something to be deeply feared,” Dr. Le Busque says.

“Since Jaws, we’ve seen a proliferation of monster shark movies – Open Water, The Meg, 47 Metres Down, Sharknado – all of which overtly present sharks as terrifying creatures with an insatiable appetite for human flesh. This is just not true. 

“Sharks are at much greater risk of harm from humans, than humans from sharks, with global shark populations in rapid decline, and many species at risk of extinction.

“Exacerbating a fear of sharks that’s disproportionate to their actual threat, damages conservation efforts, often influencing people to support potentially harmful mitigation strategies.

“There’s no doubt that the legacy of Jaws persists, but we must be mindful of how films portray sharks to capture movie-goers. This is an important step to debunk shark myths and build shark conservation.”

Reference: “Sharks on film: an analysis of how shark-human interactions are portrayed in films” by Brianna Le Busque and Carla Litchfield, 7 July 2021, Human Dimensions of Wildlife.
DOI: 10.1080/10871209.2021.1951399

An amazing hoard of vintage Harley-Davidson and Indian motorcycles and parts will be auctioned Aug. 14th in Rutland, Vt.
An amazing hoard of vintage Harley-Davidson and Indian motorcycles and parts will be auctioned Aug. 14th in Rutland, Vt.

Bob and Christine “Teenie” Bearor would ride to shows or just for fun on one of Bob’s Harley-Davidsons, often in matching outfits. The couple got married in a 1958 Corvette.

1947 Indian Chief motorcycle, an older restore that’s green and gold and with all the stainless-steel parts supposedly dipped in gold (although it has not been tested).

1947 Indian Chief motorcycle, an older restore that’s green and gold and with all the stainless-steel parts supposedly dipped in gold (although it has not been tested for actual gold plating).

1976 Harley-Davidson FLH motorcycle with a sidecar that Mr. Bearor dubbed “The Joker”. Many hours went into this custom, one-of-a-kind motorcycle.

1976 Harley-Davidson FLH motorcycle with a sidecar that Mr. Bearor dubbed “The Joker”. Many hours and thousands of dollars went into this custom, one-of-a-kind motorcycle.

1932 Indian Chief 4-cylinder motorcycle in need of some restoration work, a barn find..

1932 Indian Chief 4-cylinder motorcycle in need of some restoration work, a barn find that appears mostly complete.

1937 Indian Sport Scout with V Twin motor in need of some restoration, a barn find.

1937 Indian Sport Scout with V Twin motor in need of some restoration, a barn find that appears mostly complete.

It’s the single-owner lifetime collection of the late Robert “Bob” Bearor, a dedicated motorcycle enthusiast, and his wife Christine, who went by “Teenie”.

Bob and Teenie always surrounded themselves with vintage cars and motorcycles, especially Harley-Davidsons, which the couple would ride to shows or just for fun, often in matching outfits.”
— Yvette VanDerBrink

RUTLAND, VT, UNITED STATES, July 16, 2021 /EINPresswire.com/ — The single-owner lifetime collection of Robert “Bob” Bearor – an incredible assemblage of Harley-Davidson and Indian motorcycles, parts and memorabilia dating as far back as 1908, to include rare and important barn find motorcycles that are finally seeing the light of day, plus vintage cars, midget race cars, antique tractors, chainsaws, vintage fishing lures and more – will all come up for bid on Saturday, August 14th at the Vermont State Fairgrounds in Rutland, from 10 am-6 pm Eastern time, by VanDerBrink Auctions, based in Hardwick, Minn.Mr. Bearor, who passed away in 2019, was a dedicated car and motorcycle enthusiast and a self-described wild-man who, along with his wife Christine, who went by “Teenie” because of her diminutive stature of just 4 feet 9 inches, always surrounded themselves with vintage cars and motorcycles, especially Harley-Davidsons, which the couple would ride to shows or just for fun, often in matching outfits. The two got married in a 1958 Corvette. Teenie survives her husband.

Along the way, Bob befriended Ed Flynn, a kindred spirit wild-man and the owner of an Indian Motorcycles dealership in Bennington, Vt. Ed’s collection was just as impressive as Bob’s and, upon Ed’s death and with the blessing of Ed’s widow, Mr. Flynn’s massive inventory of Indian motorcycles (two of which were unearthed from under his house), as well as hundreds of parts (including NOS) and memorabilia from the Indian dealership, became part of Bob’s collection.

In May of this year, a team from VanDerBrink Auctions, plus some motorcycle enthusiasts from New York, went to the Bearor property to inventory Mr. Flynn’s collection. In a chicken coop they found 14 frames and vintage Indian and Harley-Davidson motorcycles. The museum was full of Indian and Harley memorabilia and parts. For three days, the crew diligently dug through the buildings on the property and uncovered 53 motorcycles, hundreds of parts and memorabilia.

Now, the two combined collections in their entirety will be sold to the highest bidder, live at the fairgrounds and online, via Proxibid.com. A preview will be held on Friday, August 13th, from 10-6. The catalog, plus a video, can be viewed now, on the VanDerBrink Auctions website: www.VanDerBrinkAuctions.com. “Many of the motorcycle parts will be just for onsite bidders, so it’s best to attend the auction in person,” said Yvette VanDerBrink of VanDerBrink Auctions.

Several motorcycles are certain to attract attention. One is the 1947 Indian Chief motorcycle, an older restore that’s green and gold and with all the stainless-steel parts supposedly dipped in gold (although it has not been tested). The bike had been touring in a display from Mr. Bearor and it ran when parked. It features a V2 4-stroke, V-Twin motor with suicide chain drive transmission, white wall tires with fringe and a big white leather seat with fringe – a truly unique motorcycle.

Then there’s the 1976 Harley-Davidson FLH motorcycle with a sidecar that Mr. Bearor dubbed “The Joker”. Known as a Coney Island custom, the bike is powered by a Harley V Twin motor, shows just 9,567 miles on the odometer and boasts lots of metal green flake. Many hours and thousands of dollars went into this custom, one-of-a-kind motorcycle. It comes with a10-page appraisal, listing all the things done to it. Bearor toured it in a semi on a walk-through display.

Two Indians that are rare but in need of a restoration are the 1932 Indian Chief 4-cylinder bike and the 1937 Indian Sport Scout with V Twin motor, both of them barn finds that appear mostly complete. Memorabilia includes vintage advertising posters for Indian Power Plus motors (25 inches by 38 inches) and an Indian and Goodyear advertising poster (13 ½ inches by 40 inches).

Other Indian motorcycles and parts in the auction include a rare 1917-1918 Indian Model O Light Twin, a 1920 Indian Power Plus, a 1924 Indian Chief, an early 1928 Indian frame, a 1932 Indian Scout, a 1932 Indian Chief 4-cylinder, a 1937 Indian Sport Scout, two 1937-1939 Indian Chief rigid frames, a 1938 Indian Junior Scout, a 1938 Indian Chief frame, a 1949 Indian Arrow and a 1951 Indian Warrior TT. See the VanDerBrink Auctions website for a full list of offerings.

The Harley-Davidson category will feature an early 1916 Harley Davidson frame and motor, a 1919-1922 Harley-Davidson Sport project, a 1991 Harley Davidson, a 1997 Harley-Davidson Electro-Glide Sport, a 1930’s Harley-Davidson frame, a Harley-Davidson VL Series project and more. Lot 170B should spark a bidding war; it’s for a very rare pair of 1916 Harley wheel discs.

Motorcycles by other makers include a 1972 Honda CB100, a 1974 CB125S and a 1982 Yamaha GT80. Motorcycle memorabilia will feature 50 vintage Indian dealer motorcycle posters, Indian pins, Indian postcards, Indian tools, Indian bicycles, Indian oil cans, vintage motorcycle leathers, kidney belts, racing suits, vintage race posters, vintage motorcycle hill climb posters and more.

The few vintage cars in the auction (none of which run and are in need of TLC) include a 1964 Ford Thunderbird coupe, white/cream with a black vinyl top, a V8 with automatic transmission and mostly rust-free body; a 1958 Chevrolet Biscayne four-door sedan old restore, black with a white top, a V8 with automatic transmission and 103,132 miles; and a 1982 DeLorean DMC12 coupe barn find with stainless-steel exterior, 33,886 miles and complete engine and transmission.

Antique tractors will include a Farmall A, a Farmall Cub with blade, a Case MC tractor, The Beaver tractor and a Massey Harris Pony. Stationery gas engines will feature a Majestic 2hp engine, a Majestic 3hp engine, an International Type M engine, an International Tom Thumb engine, a Fairbanks Morse Type Z engine, Maytag stationary gas engines and other examples.

Vintage midget race cars will include an example with a pretty cream-colored metallic paint scheme, juice brakes, a 4-cylinder engine with velocity stacks and racing seat belts; a midget with a GM 4 cylinder engine, two Rochester carbs and headers and racing seat belts; and a beautiful purple and white car with a 49 Flathead V8 with Stromberg #97 carbs, Edelbrock AL2 heads and AL2 intake, velocity stacks, Ford clutch, a three-speed transmission and electric fan.

Gas and oil memorabilia will feature a Mobil Oil gargoyle cabinet, a G&B gas pump, oil cans, signs and more. The auction will have two rings of action, with one ring dedicated to antique tractors, chainsaws and boat motors. See the VanDerBrink website for terms and conditions.

VanDerBrink Auctions specializes in collector car parts auctions, older salvage yard liquidations, auto related items, antique tractors, estates and private collections. The firm has a proven track record of selling farmland and other real estate at auction. Yvette VanDerBrink, the ownere and an auctioneer, formed the company in 2001, after a prophetic message from Minister Tom Stammon. VanDerBrink Auctions is a faith-based company, making every auction a mission.

VanDerBrink Auctions has been regionally and nationally recognized for its auctions and has conducted collector car auctions in eight states. Yvette VanDerBrink’s goal is to get cars and parts to the collectors, hobbyists and rodders, to preserve automotive history and further the car hobby. She has this same philosophy and ambition when selling real estate and land at auction. For more information, please visit www.VanderBrinkAuctions.com. Updates are posted often.

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The Bob Bearor Collection

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ECOWAS, Civil Society Meet on Strengthening Regional Capacities for Conflict Prevention in West Africa and the Sahel
ECOWAS, Civil Society Meet on Strengthening Regional Capacities for Conflict Prevention in West Africa and the Sahel

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Focal Persons of the ECOWAS Conflict Prevention Framework (ECPF) began a two-day consultative meeting with Civil Society Organisations (SCOs) on modalities to strengthen regional capacities for conflict prevention in West Africa and the Sahel.

At the opening of the meeting in Abuja, on the 12th of July, 2021, the ECOWAS Commission’s Director, Political Affairs Dr. Aderemi Ajibewa stated that the forum’s objectives are geared towards the creation of a more politically stable and economically integrated region, mindful of the impacts of democratic reversals on peace and security processes alongside its implications for the formulation and operationalization of the new generation ECPF Plans of Action.

Represented by the Dr. Onyinye Onwuka, Head, Mediation and Coordination of Regional Political Affairs, participants who were joined remotely by officials of ECOWAS institutions, diplomats, stakeholders and partners, were charged to work out a more sustained partnership framework between CSOs, ECOWAS and UN, to advance in-country implementation of conflict prevention, including the promotion of inclusive peace, constitutional and electoral processes.

Stressing that the more agreeable way to address the roots causes of conflict is set out by the ECPF, he however noted that the Framework should be a guide to actions that must be constantly adapted to the changing security dynamics while incrementally promoting and consolidating peace and security, development, and human rights in West Africa.

“we believe that by raising this platform for exchange between CSO representatives and ECPF focal points, the implementation of the ECPF through a more active, systematic and sustainable partnership, is better served” He added.

For Dr. Chukwuemeka Eze of the West Africa Network for Peace building (WANEP), the realization that several countries still struggle with a partisan security forces, judicial partiality, and dependent electoral Commission including the increased cases of identity, ethnicity and religiosity, calls for a collective assessment of roles in strengthening the integrity of democracies, elections and political transitions in fulfilment of a broader agenda of sustainable development where no one is left behind.

The representative of the Director, Political Affairs, United Nations Regional office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), Dr. James Aji disclosed the readiness of the UNOWAS to partner with Civil society and all stakeholders by enhancing regional and sub-regional partnerships to address cross-border and cross-cutting threats to peace and security in West Africa and the Sahel.

The Director, West African Division, United Nations Departments of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs and Peace Operations Mr. Abdel-Fatau Musa, in his guiding intervention, averred that there is need to urgently examine rising unemployment in the region, stressing that challenges that stare the civil society at the face would not be effectively addressed if governance is weak. He called for implementation of the numerous ECOWAS frameworks while ensuring that traction is gained by the already developed plans of action.

The meeting featured presentations on democracy and security challenges as well as gaps and lessons learnt in the operationalization of ECPF plans of action in Member states, using case examples. Participants will also be looking at the outcome of the earlier Accra consultations on the engagement of civil society as partners in preventing and responding to political and electoral conflicts as well as findings of the ECPF Plans of Action evaluation. The set of outcomes emanating from the meeting are also expected to inform broader policy discussions on strengthening of the meaningful participation of civil society in conflict prevention, inclusive peace and political processes in West Africa and the Sahel.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

UN deputy chief warns of ‘hurricane of humanitarian crises’ 
UN deputy chief warns of ‘hurricane of humanitarian crises’ 

Briefing on behalf of the UN chief, Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed, painted a grim picture of civilian executions, arbitrary arrests, detentions, forced displacement and sexual violence against children, on a massive scale, in the Tigray region of Ethiopia. 

She also spoke of “brutal attacks” in Afghanistan, Syria and Yemen, where 20 million people are living “face-to-face” with hunger. 

“We are in uncharted waters”, she said, with the “sheer scale of humanitarian needs” never greater.  

This year the UN and its partners are seeking to assist 160 million people – its highest number ever. 

‘Relentless’ attacks 

The “hurricane of humanitarian crises” is compounded by a “relentless wave of attacks” on humanitarian and medical workers, and the imposition of ever narrower constraints on humanitarian space, according to the deputy UN chief. 

“The Secretary-General urges this Council to take strong and immediate action to support its numerous resolutions on the protection of civilians, humanitarian and healthcare workers, and humanitarian space”, she told ministers and ambassadors. 

Surge in incidents 

Shootings, bodily and sexual assault, kidnappings and other attacks affecting humanitarian organizations, have increased tenfold since 2001, according to Ms. Mohammed.  

“In the five years since this Council’s landmark resolution calling for an end to impunity for attacks on healthcare systems, workers and patients have suffered thousands of attacks”, she said. 

Meanwhile, it is becoming ever more difficult to provide vital humanitarian aid to people in need. 

Delaying tactics 

Some authorities impose restrictions on the movements of humanitarian staff and supplies, long visa and customs procedures and delays at checkpoints. Other obstacles include high taxes and fees on humanitarian supplies. 

And while every country needs to act against terrorism, each also has a responsibility to make sure its counter-terrorism efforts do not undermine humanitarian operations.  

As Governments create systems around humanitarian aid delivery, the deputy chief reminded, “it is essential” that they support, rather than block aid. 

Protect humanitarian space 

Because the best way to protect humanitarian space is by ending violence and conflict, the Secretary-General had called for a global ceasefire to focus on the common enemy: the COVID-19 pandemic. 

And on Thursday, the UN chief issued a call for silencing the guns in the run up to the Olympic and Paralympic Games in Tokyo: “People and nations can build on this temporary respite to establish lasting ceasefires and find paths towards sustainable peace”, he said.  

“Turbo-charged” by COVID, humanitarian needs are outpacing the capacity to meet them, said Ms. Mohammed.  

While the UN engages in difficult negotiations to create lasting ceasefires and build sustainable peace, the delivery of life-saving humanitarian aid must continue and that requires the necessary humanitarian space. 

Member States and the Security Council have “a responsibility to do everything in their power” to end attacks on humanitarians and assets, and seek accountability for serious violations, she underscored. 

Key steps 

She said there needed to be greater respect for international humanitarian law that does not “blur the lines” between military operations, political objectives and humanitarian efforts.   

“Upholding the principles of humanitarian action…is essential to building trust with political, military, security, non-State armed groups and others”. 

Secondly, “investigation and accountability” are essential to prevent attacks on aid workers, which she said was “completely unacceptable and may constitute war crimes” adding that “what goes unpunished will be repeated”. 

Thirdly, governments need to protect the ability of humanitarian organizations to engage with conflict parties, including non-State armed groups, because when humanitarian agencies are perceived as part of a political agenda, it puts workers in danger “and reduces their effectiveness”.   

Principles of humanitarian action…essential to building trust with political, military, security, non-State armed groups and others — UN deputy chief

Counter-terrorism measures should include clear provisions to preserve humanitarian space, she said, minimizing the impact on humanitarian operations and ensuring that humanitarian and healthcare personnel are not punished for doing their jobs. 

Finally, the Council must use its influence to immediately stop attacks against schools and hospitals. 

“The unprecedented healthcare emergency cause by the COVID-19 pandemic makes the protection of medical facilities and workers more critical than ever”. 

Calls to action 

Member States were urged to endorse and implement the Safe Schools Declaration, which aims to protect all educational institutions from the worst effects of armed conflict and support the Health Care in Danger initiative. 

Due to the enormous challenges faced by humanitarian agencies, the Secretary-General has asked his incoming Humanitarian Affairs chief to appoint a Special Adviser on the preservation of humanitarian space and access, and to strengthen humanitarian negotiations. 

“The international community owes humanitarian aid agencies and healthcare and humanitarian workers its full and unwavering support in their difficult and often dangerous work”, Ms. Mohammed concluded.

One in three people globally imprisoned without trial, while overcrowding puts prisoners at risk of contracting COVID-19, says UNODC’s first global research on imprisonment
One in three people globally imprisoned without trial, while overcrowding puts prisoners at risk of contracting COVID-19, says UNODC’s first global research on imprisonment

Vienna (Austria), 16 July 2021 – One in every three prisoners worldwide are held without a trial, which means that they have not been found guilty by any court of justice, according to the first global research data on prisons published by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

The research brief, released ahead of Nelson Mandela International Day on 18 July, examines the long-term trends of imprisonment, stating that over the past two decades, between 2000 and 2019, the number of prisoners worldwide has increased by more than 25 per cent, with a global population growth of 21 per cent in the same period, with 11.7 million people incarcerated at the end of 2019. This is a population comparable in size to entire nations such as Bolivia, Burundi, Belgium, or Tunisia.

At the end of 2019 — the latest year data is available — there were around 152 prisoners for every 100,000 population. While Northern America, Sub-Saharan Africa and Eastern Europe have experienced a long-term decrease in imprisonment rates of up to 27 per cent, other regions and countries, such as Latin America and Australia and New Zealand, have seen growth over the last two decades of up to 68 per cent.

At 93 per cent, most of the persons detained in prison globally are men. Over the past two decades, however, the number of women in prisons has increased at a faster pace, with an increase of 33 per cent versus 25 per cent for men.

As guardian of the UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners – the so-called Nelson Mandela Rules — UNODC also looked at data on overcrowding in prisons. While the rates vary substantially across regions, in roughly half of all countries with available data, prison systems are operating at more than 100 per cent of their intended capacity.

The COVID-19 pandemic has drastically shifted attention towards the issue of prison overcrowding. According to a global analysis of Government and open sources, as of May 2021, nearly 550,000 prisoners in 122 countries have become infected with COVID-19, with close to 4,000 fatalities in prisons in 47 countries.

In response to the pandemic, some prisons limited recreation, work opportunities, and visitation rights, all essential components of rehabilitation programmes. With prevention measures often difficult to implement in prisons, especially when they are overcrowded, some countries meanwhile opted to release, at least temporarily, large numbers of people in custody, particularly remand prisoners and those convicted of non-violent offences.

Since March 2020, at least 700,000 persons around the globe – or roughly 6 per cent of the estimated global prison population – have been authorized or considered eligible for release through emergency release mechanisms adopted by 119 Member States.

Deadly flooding, heatwaves in Europe, highlight urgency of climate action
Deadly flooding, heatwaves in Europe, highlight urgency of climate action
Heavy rainfall that has triggered deadly and catastrophic flooding in several western European countries, is just the latest indicator that all nations need to do more to hold back climate change-induced disasters, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Friday.

The agency said that countries including Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg and the Netherlands had received up to two months’ rain in two days from 14 to 15 July, on ground that was “already near saturation”.

Photos taken at the scene of some of the worst water surges and landslides show huge, gaping holes where earth and buildings had stood until mid-week, after media reports pointed to well over 100 confirmed fatalities in Germany and Belgium on Friday morning, with an unknown number still missing across vast areas.

“We’ve seen images of houses being…swept away, it’s really, really devastating”, said WMO spokesperson Clare Nullis adding that that the disaster had overwhelmed some of the prevention measures put in place by the affected developed countries.

In a statement issued by his Spokesperson, the UN Secretary-General António Guterres, said he was saddened by the loss of life and destruction of property. “He extends his condolences and solidarity to the families of the victims and to the Governments and people of the affected countries.”

The UN chief said the UN stood ready to contribute to ongoing rescue and assistance efforts, if necessary.

Europe on the whole is prepared, but you know, when you get extreme events, such as what we’ve seen – two months’ worth of rainfall in two days – it’s very, very difficult to cope,” added Ms. Nullis, before describing scenes of “utter devastation” in Germany’s southwestern Rhineland-Palatinate state, which is bordered by France, Belgium and Luxembourg.

Highlighting typical preparedness measures, the WMO official noted In Switzerland’s national meteorological service, MeteoSwiss, had a smartphone application which regularly issued alerts about critical high-water levels.

The highest flood warning is in place at popular tourist and camping locations including lakes Biel, Thun and the Vierwaldstattersee, with alerts also in place for Lake Brienz, the Rhine near Basel, and Lake Zurich.

Dry and hot up north

In contrast to the wet conditions, parts of Scandinavia continue to endure scorching temperatures, while smoke plumes from Siberia have affected air quality across the international dateline in Alaska. Unprecedented heat in western north America has also triggered devastating wildfires in recent weeks.

Among the Scandinavian countries enduring a lasting heatwave, the southern Finnish town of Kouvola Anjala, has seen 27 consecutive days with temperatures above 25C. “This is Finland, you know, it’s not Spain, it’s not north Africa,”, Ms. Nullis emphasised to journalists in Geneva.

“Certainly, when you see the images we’ve seen in Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands this week it’s shocking, but under climate change scenarios, we are going to see more extreme events in particular extreme heat,” the WMO official added.

Troubled waters

Concerns persist about rising sea temperatures in high northern latitudes, too, Ms. Nullis said, describing the Gulf of Finland in the Baltic Sea at a “record” high, “up to 26.6C on 14 July”, making it the warmest recorded water temperature since records began some 20 years ago.

Echoing a call by UN Secretary-General António Guterres to all countries to do more to avoid a climate catastrophe linked to rising emissions and temperatures, Ms. Nullis urged action, ahead of this year’s UN climate conference, known as COP26, in Glasgow, in November.

Action, now

We need to step up climate action, we need to step up the level of ambition; we’re not doing nearly enough to stay within the targets of the Paris Agreement (on Climate Change) and keep temperatures below two degrees Celsius, even 1.5C, by the end of this century.”

WHO/Europe shows high rates of COVID-19 vaccination in prisons
WHO/Europe shows high rates of COVID-19 vaccination in prisons

Prisons need to be a priority for vaccination roll-out. New data from the WHO Health in Prisons European Database (HIPED) shows that COVID-19 vaccination of people living and working in prisons is increasing. For example, in Spain, 100% of healthcare workers in prisons are vaccinated against COVID-19.

However, there is still a long way to go to full vaccination coverage in detention facilities.
“It is encouraging to see that COVID-19 vaccination rates in prisons are increasing,” said Dr Hans Henri P. Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe. “Detention facilities have always been vulnerable in the face of epidemics and infections. So, when protecting people living and working in prisons, Member States are wisely ensuring that health protection leaves no one behind.”

Dr Kluge added, “For prisons that have seen the virus spread faster, as well as some severe complications, it is especially important to share and discuss the latest data on virus prevention. By surveilling the infection rates and vaccination coverage, among other indicators, countries can effectively adjust their policies and assign resources to what is most needed.”

Vaccination in prisons: latest data from countries

The WHO HIPED database is a tool that helps countries and prison authorities gather and share information that is crucial for addressing the current pandemic. Today, it gathers data from 42 countries in the Region. The following are examples of HIPED highlights.

  • In Spain, more than 84% of prisoners are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and another 13% have received their first dose.
  • In Poland, 74% of prisoners have been vaccinated with at least one dose.
  • In Finland, Ireland and Sweden, vaccination coverage among prisoners was reported as 34.4%, 43.7% and 59.1%, respectively.

“Some countries, for example, Spain, Poland and Ireland, have reported high levels of COVID-19 vaccination rates in prisons,” explains Dr Carina Ferreira-Borges, Acting Head of the WHO European Office for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases (NCD Office). “This shows that the ministries responsible for health in prisons, in collaboration with prison administrations, are conscious of the higher vulnerability of people in prisons and were able to quickly react to translate theory into practice, deploying the necessary resources to ensure access to important public health interventions, like vaccination. But there are still some regions where prisons are not included in national COVID-19 vaccination plans.”

Data from detention facilities: ways for improvement

“There are countries where health care in the general population is fully digital and integrated, but prisons are mostly excluded from this digital environment,” said Dr Filipa Costa, health policy specialist working for the Alcohol, Illicit Drugs and Prison Health Programme at the WHO NCD Office.

“Information is key to develop evidence-based policies. So, it is really important for the whole WHO European Region to develop a comprehensive health information system for prisons that will bring prison health into the public health domain.”

The HIPED database, recently recognized as the United Nations hub for health information in prisons, gathers information mainly through a survey voluntarily answered by Member States.
Through this framework WHO gets statistics on prison population, and useful indicators to monitor the health status and performance of prison systems, including information on the prison environment, health behaviours of people in detention, services delivered and health outcomes. The system is also set to capture adherence to the principles of equality and other international standards to ensure that people detained are not deprived of their health as well as their liberty.

New US Under Secretary of State appointed, expected to be next Tibet coordinator
New US Under Secretary of State appointed, expected to be next Tibet coordinator

By –Shyamal Sinha

Uzra Zeya worked as a diplomat in the U.S. Foreign Service for 27 years. During the Obama administration, Zeya served as the acting assistant Secretary and principal deputy assistant secretary in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. She also worked in the Embassy of the United States, Paris from 2014 to 2017.

The US senate on Tuesday confirmed Uzra Zeya for the State Department’s Under Secretary of State Bureau of Civilian Security, Democracy and Human Rights . The American diplomat is expected to also be appointed as the next US Special coordinator for Tibet, as the post has traditionally been assumed by the Under Secretary of the state. Republican Robert Destro served as the Tibet coordinator previously.

The Kashmiri-origin diplomat spoke of Chinese repression during her nomination in April, “The [Chinese government is] repressing Tibetans, Christians, and other ethnic minorities.” She also noted her work experience with Chinese dissidents and criticised the current genocide against the Uyghur community. Zeya also wished to use congressional tools such as the Global Magnitsky Act and the Uyghur Human Rights Act during her tenure as Under Secretary.

“Based on her credentials, Ms. Zeya could be a formidable Special Coordinator, and we look forward to the possibility of working with her soon,” Representative Ngodup Tsering said of her potential as the new Special Coordinator under the Biden Administration.

Uzra Zeya has previously served as the acting Assistant Secretary and Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor under the Obama administration. She would become the first Asian American to serve as the Under Secretary of State, with 73 votes in favour and 24 against, who was sworn into office by Deputy Secretary of State Wendy R. Sherman on Wednesday.

The appointment of the Special Coordinator for Tibetan Issues is mandated by the Tibetan Policy Act of 2002 and is also an indication of the US government’s commitment to a negotiated resolution on Tibet and for the preservation of religious, cultural and linguistic heritage of the Tibetan people. The first Tibet coordinator Gregory Craig, Director of Policy Planning, was appointed on Oct 13, 1997.

Ms. Zeya is a Life Member of the Council of Foreign Relations (CFR) and co-authored a 2020 CFR report on Revitalizing the State Department and American Diplomacy. Her insights on U.S. diplomacy, human rights, and national security policies have been highlighted in Politico, Foreign Affairs, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and international media.

Ms. Zeya speaks Arabic, French and Spanish. She has a Bachelor’s Degree from Georgetown University and is the recipient of several State Department Superior Honor and Senior Performance awards, the Presidential Rank Award, and the French Legion d’Honneur.

The European Emerging Bands Contest @EYE2021 is now open for applications!
The European Emerging Bands Contest @EYE2021 is now open for applications!

Calling all young European Bands!

BRUSSELS, BELGIUM, July 16, 2021 /EINPresswire.com/ — From the 8th and 9th of October 2021, the city of Strasbourg (France) will be filled with thousands of young people from all across the continent for the 4th edition of the European Youth Event (EYE2021).EYE2021 will bring together thousands of young people from all over Europe. After a tumultuous 2020, it is a moment to connect and reconnect engaged youth with the institutions and processes that underpin European democratic life as well as with each other, and to celebrate… That is why the European Parliament has teamed up with JM International in order to find the best new European musical acts to be enjoyed and to provide a platform for them to be discovered by an incredible audience from around Europe.

The EU Emerging Bands Contest is open to soloists and groups from across EU member states as well as EFTA, candidate and former member countries. As the EYE is all about celebrating youth, all members of the applying groups must be under the age of 30. Artists should have a musical style that can appeal to a wide range of people, and the jury will be looking for groups or soloists that bring a unique vibe that will connect with a young, diverse European audience.

Six amazing up-and-coming European bands will be selected to perform at the EYE2021 on the evening of the 8th and 9th of October at the EYE2021. They will each receive a prize of €1000 as well as their expenses covered getting to and from the event as well as during their stay in picturesque Strasbourg.

Applications are open from the 16th of July until the 1st of September. 15 finalists will be selected by a technical jury with representatives from JM International and the European Parliament. A Youth Jury of under-30 musicians and youth & music experts will select the final winners.

If you are a young European musical act looking for the opportunity of a lifetime search no more! Apply now on Mubazar.com!

For more information contact: Giulia Annibaletti – giulia@jmi.net
Or visit: music.eye2021.eu

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Pope appoints Auxiliary Bishop in Delhi, India - Vatican News
Pope appoints Auxiliary Bishop in Delhi, India – Vatican News

By Robin Gomes

Pope Francis has appointed an Auxiliary Bishop in the Archdiocese of Delhi, the Indian capital.  He is Father Deepak Valerian Tauro from Muzaffarpur Diocese in eastern India’s Bihar state.  The 53-year-old native of southern India’s Karnataka state served as the Rector of St. Albert’s College of Ranchi in Jharkhand state. 

Curriculum vitae

Father Deepak Valerian Tauro was born on August 2, 1967, in Chikmagalur, Karnataka. He completed his philosophy studies at the Morning Star Regional Seminary and College in Barrackpore, near Kolkata, West Bengal,(1986-1990) and, after two years of regency in the Diocese of Muzaffarpur (1990-1992), he studied theology at St. Albert’s College in Ranchi (1992-1996). He received his Master’s in Spirituality & Counseling from Dharmaram Vidya Kshetram in Bangalore (2002-2005).  He was ordained to the priesthood on May 10, 1996, for the Diocese of Muzaffarpur.

Thereafter, he was assigned the following responsibilities:  

– 1996-1997: Assistant parish priest in Samastipur

– 1997-1999: Assistant parish priest in Bettiah

– 1999-2002: Rector of the Minor Seminary of Muzaffarpur

– 2005-2007: Again rector of the Minor Seminary of Muzaffarpur

– 2007-2010: Secretary of the Bishop of Muzaffarpur

– 2007-2011:  Vice director of the Diocesan Youth Forum

– 2009-2011: Regional Secretary of Conference of Diocesan Priests of India for Bihar, Jharkhand & Andaman’s Bishops’ Council (BIJHAN)

– 2009-2011: Rector of the Minor Seminary of Muzaffarpur)

– 2011-2015: Lecturer and Spiritual Director of St. Albert’s College, Ranchi 

Since 2012 – Secretary of Bihar, Jharkhand & Andaman’s Bishops’ Council (BIJHAN)

2015 to 2021 – Rector of St. Albert’s College, Ranchi.

Delhi Archdiocese

The Archdiocese of Delhi, now headed by Archbishop Anil Couto, was established on June 4, 1959.  The Metropolitan Ecclesiastical Province of Delhi includes the three suffragan dioceses of Jammu-Srinagar, Jullundur, and Simla and Chandigarh.

There are some 100,300 Catholics in the archdiocese, who are spread across 61 parishes.  They are served by 132 diocesan priests, 157 religious priests and 413 women religious.

In the Catholic Church, every bishop should head a diocese.  Since an auxiliary bishop aids the diocesan bishop and does not head a diocese, he is assigned a titular see.  A titular see or diocese no longer exists, such as in Asia Minor and North Africa, where through centuries many dioceses became defunct and disappeared because of various reasons. 

Hence, with the appointment of Father Deepak Valerian Tauro as Auxiliary Bishop of Delhi, the Pope assigned him the See of Buleliana, a diocese that once existed in North Africa, probably in what is Tunisia today.  When Father Tauro will be consecrated bishop, he will be the only Auxiliary Bishop of Delhi Archdiocese. 

WHO/UNICEF: Childhood vaccinations hindered by Covid-19 pandemic - Vatican News
WHO/UNICEF: Childhood vaccinations hindered by Covid-19 pandemic – Vatican News

By Vatican News staff writer

An estimated 23 million children missed out on basic vaccines through routine immunization services last year, a figure representing 3.7 million more than in 2019, say the UN Children’s Fund and the World Health Organization.

Many of these children – up to 17 million – likely did not receive any vaccine throughout the year, resulting in the exacerbation of already present inequalities in access to vaccines. More so, a significant number of the children live in areas affected by conflict, in under-served remote communities or in places where there is limited access to basic health and social services.

According to the latest data published by the international organizations on Thursday, these concerning statistics are largely due to global service disruptions due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Vaccination disruptions

Immunization services in many areas experienced disruptions in 2020, WHO and UNICEF said, with the Southeast Asian and Eastern Mediterranean Regions most affected. Moreover, as access to health services and immunization outreach were hampered due to the pandemic, the numbers of children not receiving even their first vaccinations increased globally.

In fact, when compared to 2019, 3.5 million more children missed their first dose of diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine (DTP-1), while 3 million more children missed their first measles dose, the report notes.

“Even as countries clamour to get their hands on COVID-19 vaccines, we have gone backwards on other vaccinations, leaving children at risk from devastating but preventable diseases like measles, polio or meningitis,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General.

“Multiple disease outbreaks would be catastrophic for communities and health systems already battling COVID-19, making it more urgent than ever to invest in childhood vaccination and ensure every child is reached,” he added.

Urgent action needed

In the face of the situation, UNICEF Executive Director, Henrietta Fore, stresses that the evidence should be a clear warning as “the Covid-19 pandemic and related disruptions have cost us valuable ground we cannot afford to lose, and the consequences will be paid in the lives and wellbeing of the most vulnerable.”

Fore further notes that there were already worrying signs before the pandemic that we were beginning to lose ground in the fight to immunize children against preventable illnesses, including with the measles outbreak two years ago.

“The pandemic has made a bad situation worse. With the equitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines at the forefront of everyone’s minds, we must remember that vaccine distribution has always been inequitable, but it does not have to be,” she urged.

Risk of resurgence of vaccine-preventable diseases

With global attention and significant resources diverted to the fight against Covid-19, the international organizations lament that disruptions to immunization service provision have meant that clinics have been closed or hours reduced in some countries, while many are reluctant to seek healthcare for fear of contracting Covid-19 and the transportation challenges due to lockdown measures.

In this regard, Dr Seth Berkley, CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance expressed concern that the alarming numbers suggest that “the pandemic is unravelling years of progress in routine immunization and exposing millions of children to deadly, preventable diseases.”

“This is a wake-up call”, he stressed. “We cannot allow a legacy of COVID-19 to be the resurgence of measles, polio and other killers.”

“We all need to work together to help countries both defeat COVID-19, by ensuring global, equitable access to vaccines, and get routine immunization programmes back on track. The future health and wellbeing of millions of children and their communities across the globe depend on it,” Dr. Berkley said. 

Agencies call for joint efforts

To combat the situation and work to recover lost ground due to Covid-19 disruptions, UNICEF, WHO and its partners recommend the restoration of vaccine campaigns and services so that countries can safely deliver routine immunization during the pandemic. To achieve this, they urge that health workers and community leaders actively communicate the importance of vaccinations.

The agencies also call for rectifying the gaps in immunization coverage, including identifying overlooked communities during the pandemic and implementing country plans to prevent the outbreak of vaccine-preventable diseases as part of Covid-19 recovery efforts.